The tenth day of September words and music by B. F. Abeling It was the 10th day of September In ninety-eight Anno Domini when our fore-fathers won the glorious fight at Old St. George's Caye Then hail them - cheer them. Let our grateful loyal hearts not fail them, as we march and sing and shout in merry glee The Battle of St. George's Caye. Hip! Hip! Hurrah. Hip! Hip! Hurrah. On September 10th, we celebrate the Battle of St. George's Caye. This is the time of the year when Belize dresses itself with its patriotic colors: blue, white and red. Allow us to take you back in time through this historical event. The following information is taken from the book "I love to tell the story" by Lawrence Vernon.
Prior to 1798 the Spaniards attempted to
invade Belize at least six times, and only once were they successful when
in 1779 Spanish ships surprised the inhabitants of St. George's Caye,
burned down the buildings and took away 140 prisoners. These were
imprisoned in the dungeons of Havana and not released until 1782.
After 1760 two treaties came on the scene which seem
to have solidified the Baymen's resolve to retain the Settlement of
Belize. The Treaty of Paris, 1763 allowed Spain to recognize the logwood
cutting activities of the Settlement for the first time. Since no
boundaries were drawn, this perhaps gave the Spaniards cause to destroy
the St. George's Caye settlement in 1779. The Treaty of Versailles, 1783,
along with a Convention of 1786, gave the Baymen the right to cut and
carry away logwood with certain boundaries; to cut mahogany; and to
reoccupy St. George's Caye.
Based on a report by a Spanish Commissioner who
visited the Yucatan that the Baymen were extending their logwood cutting
borders dangerously close to a nearby Spanish town, Spain issued orders
for the immediate and effective expulsion of the settlers occupying the
Settlement.
In March of 1796 it was reported that the Spaniards
had started warlike preparations in the neighborhood. This, of course
made the people of the Settlement very worried, and the Baymen
immediately requested defensive help from the Governor of Jamaica, who
complied by sending Lieutenant Colonel Thomas Barrow to the Settlement as
Commander-In-Chief. As a point of interest it is worthy of historical
note that this move revived the Superintendency, a step which was to have
a very important effect on the constitutional development of
Belize.
Barrow also brought a degree of militarism to the
Settlement as he immediately mounted regular guards and paraded the men,
proving to be a much more gallant spirit than the unruly Baymen.
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